Step 7: Epoxy & Cover

Step 8: Personalize!

Just because it's a chewed up and reassembled power cord doesn't mean it can't be stylish. In dark clubs or reception halls I have trouble telling w...

On location photography shoots I usually run into the need for several chargers and very few power outlets. Other times I've packed the camera bags and forgotten the second, identical charger cable thinking it was already in the bag.

Often times I am photographing a late wedding reception and running low on juice or will need to recharge gear for the next day's shoot while at still at a late shoot. More frequently I find only one outlet available near our table and need to charge several items at once.

This is the easiest solution I have found using the cables included without buying special chargers that handle multiple batteries at once.

30 minutes or so? Not too tricky or difficult once you have the parts together.

** All the external hard drives I use have the same kind of figure-8 AC leads to the power bricks, and this Instructable can be applied to powering multiple drives or any other peripherals using same ends. **

To make it slightly less bulky in the 'massive' joint I recommend staggering the connections of the hot and neutral wire. This serves 2 purposes -- It makes for a longer, thinner joint-- and if the insulation were to fail on either joint you don't have hot and neutral bare wires as close together!

(cut and splice hot wire 2 inches longer than the neutral on the supply side, and inversely on the load side, so the 2 joints aren't side by side)

Wonderful ible -- I've done a few custom wires like this for computer equipment before where an extra power bar would just be overkill :) 5*

Great tip. This splitter has been in my camera bag 2+ years now and shows next to no wear, any new editions would benefit from the staggered technique you detailed.

I've got a 3-ended cable like this under the desk to power 3 external hard drive power supplies with less cable clutter too, works great! Over the last year the parallel blade outlet on this cable has been used more with a MacBook Pro 85W charger instead of the AA charger pictured as needs have changed. That was the best addition to this custom cable for location work.

The Nikon EN-EL3e battery chargers use a whole 0.25 A each so you could split 5 on 16 or 14 AWG wire without issue. The tricky part is making a neat junction from 3 leads, 5 would probably require larger heat shrink to cover the junction. Check your power ratings and wire capacity, and as always, build at your own risk.

That's pretty neat. Say, are any of those chargers the same voltage? If so, you can take this to the next level by substituting multiple psu's with a single, higher output psu with multiple DC connectors.. this is also safer than splicing a mains AC cord (I personally splice AC cords all the time, much the way you have done, though some people would object). Course, that would mean you might have to actually spend money. So your method is definitely good stuff. :)

The AA charger uses DC, but the 2 body battery chargers using the figure-8 are AC in, which is why I made the AC split. If I didn't need it to be portable and travel several times a week I would have opted for a grounded feed, grounded box for the split. Alas, solder, heat shrink, and epoxy would do well for keeping it small and streamlined. Also, as you noted, I didn't have to buy another DC supply and used the cables originally included. The other mod I had in mind was to open the 2 body battery chargers and re-case them as one unit for 2 batteries with only 1 AC in connection.

The speedlights / flashes in our location gear only use AA so no need for chargers to handle other battery sizes. (This one may also handle AAA but I do not use that size.)

I have shot the Nikon D70/ D70s, D200 and D300, and the body battery chargers pictured herein will charge body batteries for all of these bodies. (The EN-EL3a battery will work in all these bodies.) This project can be applied to chargers / splitters for just about any camera brand.

What the cameras cost is dependent on where, when and from whom you purchased them. This is a post about an AC adapter cable and I'm not up for price busting or brand comparing, just battery charging. There are plenty of camera clubs and forums for waving around what you use and what you spent. I prefer to just show the photos made with whatever camera it is I'm holding.

My photography is found at http://ebphotography.com if you're curious what the above cameras can help make once they have fresh batteries charged and ready. All photos I've posted there were made by having battery chargers working to make sure I plenty of juice for the great shots when they were taken.